62 Group
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 62 Group was a militant broad-based coalition of anti-fascists in the United Kingdom, To be a formal member you had to be Jewish but they worked with people from all communities including many Irish and Black activists. It was set up in 1962 and modeled after the earlier 43 Group (founded after World War II it is said that the name came from the number of people present at the founding meeting) which voluntarily disbanded 5 April 1950.
Its tactics consisted of direct action against those groups it believed were organising violence against minority groups, which sometimes resulted in violent confrontations. This it claimed was a legitimate response to the violence and intimidation, for example the burning of synagogues, that was certainly taking place at the time. However, it attracted criticism from more moderate groups who shunned violence and advocated challenging racism through legislative means, and members of the far-right who accused it of deliberately starting violence.
The group was Intelligence-led in most of its activities. Like the 43 Group it had many ex-service men and women in its ranks. In the mid sixties Searchlight first appeared in newspaper format with the support of all three major political parties and the Trade Unions. 31 years ago it became a monthly magazine with an international readership and massive trade union support in more recent years.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Article on 62 group from Connections, an ethnic history project.
- Article on 635 Group. Militant Leeds antifascist group affiliated to Antifa.
- Article on 43 Group. Post-war London-based militant anti-fascist organisation.